Sunday, June 30, 2019

Unsilence Students' Voices [repost]

When I decided to write an article with the title Unsilence Students’ Voices I thought long and hard about using the word “Unsilence”! Every time I typed that word the text editor underlined it in red reminding me that it was not a “real” word. Was I rebelling against that red underlining? Maybe! I decided that it expressed what I wanted to communicate and so I went with it. The article was published on pages 14-16 in the journal of the California Mathematics Council, the CMC ComMuniCator. CMC leadership kindly gave me permission to provide access to the PDF for viewing/downloading:


On October 29, 2012 I received an email from Karen Cowe and she wrote, “You knew that one of these days I’d come knocking.” … “This will be the last Ignite! for me, so it would be great to finally get you up there!” I decided this was my opportunity to use what I had been learning from watching Annie, Max, and Steve (at that time my Math Forum colleagues who had each done several Ignite talks). One way to cope with the pressure of finally doing one myself was not to tell anyone at the Math Forum what I was planning to do!

On Saturday, December 1, 2012, mission accomplished! I presented an Ignite! talk on the same subject as my journal article at the California Mathematics Council - Northern Section (CMC-North) conference held in Asilomar, CA. It can be viewed on YouTube here:


After that experience I thought of the connections between my experience of watching and learning and how that might play out in a mathematics classroom. There are students who are reluctant to participate at first and it may take time before they are ready to perform. Are they watching? Are they learning? When they’re ready, will they perform? I believe they are and they definitely will. And, as I talk about it in my own performance, if we create classroom environments to help unsilence their voices, there is even more of a chance that our students will perform!

Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Tips on Finding What Might Seem Lost

Recently NCTM created a new page on their website that you now reach if you type in http://mathforum.org. From that page they've linked to:
  • Problems of the Week
  • some Notice and Wonder resources
  • some Ignite YouTube videos 
  • the Year Game
  • archives of
    • Ask Dr. Math®
    • Discussions
    • Teacher2Teacher
Although, these resources/pages are not linked from their new page, these URLs continue to function:
If you have bookmarked other webpages that use the domain "mathforum.org" you may find that you are redirected to "https://www.nctm.org/mathforum/" rather than the page you're expecting. One way to view those pages is to use the Wayback Machine! Here's the Wikipedia link to read more about how this digital archive works: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wayback_Machine

Here are links using the Wayback Machine that you may find useful:

Max's blog
     http://web.archive.org/web/20171006203653/http://mathforum.org:80/blogs/max
Annie's blog
     http://web.archive.org/web/20171005173148/http://mathforum.org/blogs/annie/
Suzanne's blog
     http://web.archive.org/web/20170814161551/http://mathforum.org:80/blogs/suzanne/
PoWerful Ideas
     http://web.archive.org/web/20170606050920/http://mathforum.org/blogs/powerfulideas/archives/
Engineering / Math Challenge
     http://web.archive.org/web/20170606093004/http://mathforum.org/emc/
The Art of Math Challenge
     http://web.archive.org/web/20170606132350/http://mathforum.org/artofmath/
The Math Images Project
http://web.archive.org/web/20170617013016/http://mathforum.org:80/mathimages/index.php/Main_Page
Math Tools
     http://web.archive.org/web/20170918002652/mathforum.org/mathtools
Financial Education Problems of the Week
     http://web.archive.org/web/20130902024701/http://mathforum.org/pow/financialed/
Math Forum Internet News archives
     http://web.archive.org/web/20180407011835/http://mathforum.org/electronic.newsletter/
Problem Solving Articles
     http://web.archive.org/web/20170204145954/http://mathforum.org:80/pow/teacher/articles.html
About the Math Forum Rubric
     http://web.archive.org/web/20170619090550/http://mathforum.org:80/pow/teacher/scoring.html
PoWs in the Classroom: The PoW Process
     http://web.archive.org/web/20170621204426/http://mathforum.org:80/pow/teacher/process.html
Think You Don't Have Time to Use the PoWs?
http://web.archive.org/web/20170714031010/http://mathforum.org/pow/teacher/PoWsDontHaveTime.pdf
Cathi Sanders's webpages
     http://web.archive.org/web/20170315024042/mathforum.org/sanders/
Chameleon Graphing by Ursula Whitcher
     http://web.archive.org/web/20130526085609/http://mathforum.org:80/cgraph/
Varnelle Moore's Primary Math Activities
     http://web.archive.org/web/20170604002032/http://mathforum.org/varnelle/
Games for Math and Social Skills
     http://web.archive.org/web/20130902071821/http://mathforum.org/alejandre/cooperate.html
Mr. Brandenburg's List of Recommended Books on Math and Science
     http://web.archive.org/web/20130902071759/http://mathforum.org/t2t/faq/brandenburg.new.html
Magic Squares by Mutsumi Suzuki
http://web.archive.org/web/20130429061018/http://mathforum.org/te/exchange/hosted/suzuki/MagicSquare.html

Suzanne's Mathematics Lessons (last archived October 20, 2017):
 http://web.archive.org/web/20171020042356/http://mathforum.org/alejandre/
the first webpage I ever wrote - July, 1995!
 http://web.archive.org/web/20160715175508/http://mathforum.org/alejandre/frisbie/coyote/interdisciplinary6.html
Know, too, that if you've bookmarked a page that now redirects, try the Wayback Machine page to see if you can locate it!


Saturday, February 10, 2018

Max Ray-Riek: Ignite

Retirement is treating me well. So far I've
  • cut my hair!
  • joined a gym and now go there with my husband and younger son on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Sundays - slowly I'm learning their routines - some things I can't do yet but it's a process!
  • agreed to continue working with PCMI TLP (Park City Mathematics Institute Teacher Leadership Program) for at least two more years so that we can fully transition the archiving I started in 2001. 
  • finished Hidden Figures (for me that book took more undivided attention than I could normally manage - so full of interesting details).
  • been helping Annie promote the CMC-South and (soon) the CMC-North Ignite YouTube videos from late October and early December -- all on the CMC YouTube channel: http://bit.ly/cmcYouTube
This morning I stumbled across Max's Ignite video from October 24, 2014 and I watched/listened to the full 5 minutes and then decided to tweet the link in case other folks found themselves with 5 leisure minutes on a Saturday morning/afternoon. Then I thought, I should gather all of the Ignite links of Max's that I know about and put them all on one page for handy referencing. Max has such interesting, valuable, and useable things to say about learning. 

Enjoy!
~Suzanne
April 15, 2011
Why 2 > 4: A Proof by Induction

April, 2012
Fun with Trig Identities

December, 2013
"Keep Your Head Up and... Listening is Hard

April, 2014
"Teaching Isn't Rocket Science. It's Harder.

October 24, 2014
"Concept, Method, Procedure (The secret formula for math success)"

November 8, 2014
"Look, Mom! I'm a Mathematician!

December 6, 2014
"Math Teachers: The Key to Ending Racism

April 15, 2015
“What We Talk About When We Talk About Teaching

October 21, 2015
"Three Reasons Not to Listen to Me Talk About Technology in Algebra Class

November 11, 2015
“Max and Annie’s Minnesota Adventure”

December 12, 2015
"Tweet Me, Maybe?

April 15, 2016
“The Revolution Will Be Blogged”

October, 2017
"What Gives Me Hope”

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Step 2: #phonespockets 

My guess is that some folks
  • are still trying to remember to try the #phonespockets idea for 5 or 10 minutes and then listen and then try it again the next day or a few days later. 
  • have done #phonespockets one or two times but still could do it more to get more comfortable with the idea of really listening to themselves
  • have become comfortable with #phonespockets and are ready to reflect
Here's one other short [5 minute] activity to add to the mix!  

          [@maxmathforum] Why 2 > 4: A Proof by Induction
          [@MFAnnie] Ever Wonder What They'd Notice?
          [@MFAnnie] Hidden Decision-Making in the Math Classroom
          [@SuMACzanne] Unsilence Students' Voices

          [@maxmathforum] Keep Your Head Up and... Listening is Hard -- let's save it for last!

As you watch the Ignite videos and also reflect on your private audio recordings:

What do you notice? What do you wonder?


For now let's continue using the #phonespockets hashtag. 

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Step 1: #phonespockets

In October after presenting "Tips on Managing Feedback" with Erin Igo (@igomath) at the NCTM Regional in Atlantic City the time seemed right to start a Twitter SlowChat. We had picked a hashtag to use but I hadn't really done my homework -- turns out that initial hashtag was already in use.

Now having gone to three NCTM Regionals (Atlantic City, Minneapolis, Nashville) and two CMC conferences (Palm Springs and Asilomar) the time seems right to get the SlowChat rolling! Thanks to James Carr (@jjc578) for retweeting what Michael Fenton (@mjfenton) had tweeted on October 22. It was a great reminder that it's time to get things started.



Let's start the SlowChat just by actually doing this several times over the span of two weeks. Ideally, each person participating will get more and more comfortable with the idea of audio recording for (no more than) 10 minutes once a day AND finding time to privately listen to the recording.

NOTE: I think the experience of doing this alone at first is VERY important. I think of it as a similar idea of encouraging students to take ownership of their learning. You're not relying on someone else to help you listen to yourself. YOU are listening to yourself and YOU are allowing yourself into your classroom. 

Step 1: Record yourself and listen to the recording - do this several times or maybe even daily!

Step 2: If you have thoughts to share use #phonespockets to tweet about
  • logistics of managing to make 5-10 minute audio recordings 
  • what you're noticing and/or wondering as you listen to your recording and/or what you want to try the next time
Step 3: Once #phonespockets is more routine, we'll switch to using the more reflective #2vs4ratio [more on this in a couple of weeks]